The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 3, 1899, Page 4

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N m of Linperial souventre K Qhrysanthemuma are golng out of |fashion in England, One society for jPalsing the flowers, after having had ten prosperous years, have been Jobliged to wind up. —_——- a | Welsh Rarebit--One-quarter gob- Honolulu Is Now an isi." scr, uae’ awe es tablespoontul of Worcestershire oe, one-quarte teaspoonful of ustand, one ee (white and yelk separate, Warm ale th chafing dish last yoke of om, then white of cme }both having been beaten, and ¢ pinch of baking soda, atir, until amooth, Serve on toast Mins pastan Ingalls, a war time nurse, ts ome the wite of Robert Sehick, of the Reading bar Miss Ingalls ie a daughter of ex- Benawor Ingalls Monogram frames are unique and ty A plain white frame, to be in ten conte monogram from let y on your foundation » result ts pleasing If the eves be weak, bathe them in @ basin of soft water, to which a American Port. Mast Sam's Customs Officers. \« used as foundation, Cut the Ta ‘The fact that Honolulu ie now an ‘American port will possibly cause | pinch of ta walt and a deasert- some trouble for the companies op- spoonful of brandy have been added, erating the steamers Garonne ant" largest woman's club sald to Manuense to that port. These ves exist in the world ts the Pioneer Wo- man's Club of Lond Something pretty and useful that can be easily made at home are the dainty litte Tam O’Shanter-lke crocheted caps, made Of wool or silk and trimmed with quills, sels are managed by Hritish cor Porations, and now that Honolulu is & port of the United States, will be . obliged to make special arrange- ments with the government before any freight and passengere can be Janded there. Honolulu offlelally became eriean port on Wednesday, And up to this time no arrange- ments between the steamship com END OF THE TERM panies and the customs officials have | -_—_-- been negotiated. This is a clreum- stance which has seldom occurred, orl » teidom secure Close of the University Until until the customs officials have re- Next Monday. cetved instructions from Washing- ton, The Manuense hauled alongside the Arlington dock yesterday after- noon and took on a small portion of her freight, but she bas 4 large amount of ballast in her hold. and ‘will go Into the ballast grounds to- it, Some tittle the | ‘Wednesday was the t day of) the winter term at the University of Washington, and the faculty and students will now enjoy a well earned rest, until the besinning of the spring term next Monday, Dur- ing the term just ended over 264 regalar students were registered, be- sides a large number of spectals, in- cluding those taking the miners’ course, Which make the tetal num- ber registered somewhere over 300. From the standpoint of work, the term has been moat successful and the outlook for the new term te very aht. President F. P. Graves is stilt tn Olympla looking after the university's Interests and Prof. C. F, Reeves, the dean, ts conducting the institution in his absence. over July. It seems that the freight bills the shipment were not paid, and gg? until the settlement was 5 ‘The matter was finally Agsinst Negro Suffrage. RALEIGH, N. C., Mareh 2—An amendment to the conatitution of North Carelina, limiting the usff- rage, has been adopted by both branches of the general arsembly It passed the house yesterday by a Postmaster Meem has rectived a% yore of #1 to 27."and the renate to- it from the department ayy pny a vote of 41 to 6 It will Washington giving to the North pe aubmitted to a vote ofthe people ‘Transportation and Trad-| in August, 1901, at the rame time, Company of this city, the con- State officers are voted for | for carrying all except firet| The avowed object of the ‘amend. | matt and letters of lower clas-| ent 18 to eliminate the ignorant on to @kagway and Dawson | Resto vote. To do this, educational, | the coming open season. | Property and poll tax qualifications | tract calls for three round fe prescribed. Hut this is made in- M. A. T. and T. Company Se- cures a Contract. (the property, and NOW AT WO ee ee Assessor and Depu- ties Active. VHLL BE BUSA FOR SITY DAYS es jules Thet We Wee bold Bown b Which the Deputy Assessors Will Be Governed. the county county, leaving the ‘The assessor as follows. City districte=Ne, 1, F. D. LeGate ¥ 8. Winehell; No. 2 W. C. Reynolds; No, & 4 Nicholas Smith: water County districta—No, 1, C. A. Bar ton, No. 2 George Mart; No. 3, C. T. Lord; No. if, Luctus Day; No. 18, Porter i Mo. 19, not Biled; No. 2, not The following thatructions “Third—He just and enermetic use all diligent and reasonable ef- forts to see, personally, each proper- property owner | statement after, Meted, and you have valued no ¢ircum~ stances te ‘the proper- “Fitth - plain and make ror oon and give in each instance name. not say, P. Smith, but aay, Peter Binith; do ot say, John H, Brown, but say John Henry Brown, ood. oer soar ae pected to ine reasonable time. GAME TO LATE a ‘The Order Relieving a Boy, - Burden in Preparing for War THE SEATTLE STAR. on the best of authority that the! ventoried value of the treneforr Property wae 915,000,000, Thin mur, however, le not the one to be paid for the Magee and other allied tn terests in the Fall Brook company. | The purchasers do not wmree to pay te them any principal sum for thelr valuable property, but do ngree tr them bonds, the | principal 000, The years, ar bonds are to run for Kipling’s Condition mivaass recone: Shows @ Change. be paid to the Magee and allied tn- teresta, The payment of the atipu lated annual interest on the bonds! quarentecd ‘by the purchasing par. |S NOW RESTING VERY EASILY guaranteed by the purehasing par tes, the guarantees being made a fallroad property more phan areple | for the purpose, An outright sale of the road was impossible, an the Magee entate was entailed for three generations by John Magee, grand. father of the present head of the! permanent and fixed lien on the road. Murder Over a $5 Bull. CUMBERLAND, Md, March %— Matthew H, Jones, a miner, this morning fatally shot John Muir, an- other miner, aged 22, son of William Mutr, The men had been drinking and were congregated until early this morning tallor shop in Lo- naconing. Jones claimed to he | missed $5 and acoused Mulr of rob- bing Dim, He stationed himself in front of the tailor shop, and when Muir staggered out he shot him, the bullet entering one wide of the fore- head and lodging in the other Jones is now in jatl here, Muir can- Rot recover, j RAPID-FIRE GUNS | Both His Daughters, Suffering From Improving. NEW YORK, March 3.—iKiplin Jeondition has shown such a decided improvement that his physicians wil) Innue only one bulletin a day. Early today Kipling was resting quietly. Hoth his daughters show marked improvement, Another indicat that the pationt is getting better, ts that today he asked to be shown the newepapers and seemed to be wreatly pleased and affected at the interest In his illness shown by the American people Ever eines Kipling has been ill, the eantern papers have been full of |reminiacences filuatrating the famed | Writer's characteristices, The pres- ence In New York at this time of | Beattie Balestier, Kipting's brother- in-law, who Is awaiting Kipling's re- covery, when he will sue the novelist for $50,000, alleging malictoun prose- cution, Is also attracting interest The New York Bun has the following to say regarding Kipling’s trouble with him From the time Kipling made bis firet vinit to the Halestier's tm Ver- ment none of the people had ever been able to find out much about him. He held himself aloof from the natives, minded bin own business, and discouraged any advances that mont ef them made toward estab. lishing friendly relations, They wanted to know what his house was like on the Inside, They never found on bee they never got farther than the door, They wanted io know how he lived and worked, what he ate and when and how he lept. They never had a chance to sratify thetr curiosity until the Bal- estier case came to trial, The good New England people concluded that it would be « feant for oyes and rare, no they went to the court room as if they were to attend the circus The tawyere on both sides, local practitioners, understood the mo- tive that ettracted so many prople to the trial, and wishing to do all they could for their fellow citizens, hus increasing their own popular~ ity, they asked Kipling all sorte of questions, Neither Kipling’s por Balestiors lawyers interposed any objections to questions that had not the remotest bearing on the case-- immaterial. trrelevant and out of or- j Very Greut. It is the prevalent idea that the Jong range and rapid-fire guns of the present acy must make war yY more Cestryctive than it formerly wae, end it the bur- den of preparation war in at Present heavier than It ever was be- fore. Armaments are more murder- ous and their cost more oppressive te t taxpayer than at any pre- vious time. In a recént speech at Dover, however, a contrary view was expressed by Mr. Wyndham, under secretary for war in the Brit- teh government. “The great de- struction of the Arabs at Ormdurman was due,” says the under secretary, “to @ semi-barbaric foe advancing against an orgonised and civilised foe and persisting in that blunder }At the cost of extermination.” Fa- naticlam and ignorance on the part of the Dervishes caused them to (face certain death, but civilined na- | tons will not require their armies to ‘fight when extermination can be the ‘only result, Expert soldiers, ac ‘eording te Mr. Wyndham, are of ‘epinion that the development of (he « weapons of war “tends rather & laiminution of the sacrifices of iif iby “making pitched battles rarer Strategy, together with obvious ru- pertority in money, in ten, in arms jand transportation facilits will hereafter, to a large extent secure fesults without fighting. by « “show effective as to white people by the t ro Bo. Magerg = tor further provision that any person Soldier. of hands,” so to speak. Like the der, as the lawyers pharse it. It i next, the rate of pay being | C8" Yate who was entitied to vote! | coon in the story, who. when con- happened, therefore, that Kipling nd trip. ‘The boats wilt ©? January Ist, 1967, or any time MANILA, P. 1, dan. 29.—<By Mall) fronted by Capt Crockett, said: was obliged to gtve, jn the courte of mired to carry more than (Prior fRerets, of whose ancestors —/There arrived yeaterday an ord: ("Don't shoot, estenel, ra — his conmnatin. p Eteat de at ot Sere mai “s » entitled to | down!” the weaker combatant here: sonal and family history hile he Fone Wer: oh een NT Te Moe for the discharge of @ soldier which | J orce will be dimponed in an vOViod* was on the stand Frattieboro learn | Shot inthe Street. | GARDINER, Me. Maret 3 The mat! iter to be carried by the boats wiilgonsist of newspapers, merchatidise, fackages, ete. the ob Ject beltiy to get thin chine of malt of murdering hin sister-in- | chare> matter tr to ite destination duringsthe ppen season. It is stated law, Miss Mamie Small, in this city} that at ¥ ‘Oe pointy along the last evening route to Da’ of mai! matt and other eli on their tponths ago ar stotect, wile Clederintion tal It te understood fhe new contractors there are now tons of the second, third sated were started |'% Killed aa she , } | street tt ts alleged that Knights wae Knights will neither affirm nor de- | sit, He admita that he waa) y his MANING MEN ORGANIZE in Gardiner yesterday and sought a — au interview with Mb Small last evening. but she declined utterty) * Will Meet at the Chamberof ‘© bre any conversation with Bim After bie arrest, Knights, in con- Commerce March 8. versotion with a reporter, stated that be had known the woman for The mining men of Seattle wt pe tal Years and clam to have meet at the Chamber of Commer ee then tar Carwin, that one at 6:29 next Wednesday afte far infatigted with him. He says Marth §, to’ormunize for thé purpote Heorion phaded with her to cease of furthering the development of bling hits mines discovefed and operated in ose phat heintis are. Reoted by Western Washington) The new or- the bad girl’*family, who say that ganization will number ainfost Mfty Knick was dé in his efforts members, nearly al! of mm fe to gah the fav of the «irl, and * interested to @ greater or lens they At her awly to free her from fn the mines on the west sior his covhany the Cascade mountains. At Koleh®& at one \me wae an in-| formal meeting resentiy held ite of He Maine (nsane asylum, mittee, Consisting sf Charies L« at has nh heen conte joy. Prof. O. BR. Dan}, W. Kuther- ty ansoundwince he Mee that insti fora and A. W. Andégonwas ap-|tytion. Helpas a sitkr who hae pointed to draft a plan of heen insane Sr sorr a Knights zation for a society witch was taken tothe Augusk jail have for its objects, in atdit ah ie the general welf: at mide x | mining men, the prevention of the Favors’a Protecto } sate of gets nt bes we | T+ bs ugh MONTREAL, | March ajor | tades for hie father. ‘The balloting ties, the stimulation ant advertec |e onorat B. Rlegk de Dios, A the at home was close and it was the ment of mines worth develop ne be * Philip M vote of the Kansas regiment, cast tr advertisement of the w pede ta of the « ‘Honololu the day before young western mining section, tn estab- “ "eager | Dawea died, that ted hie father. Uahinent of mineral exhibit in this ay lone of the novi riatmas boxes tty, and Kong spvection > aba The original intentios of the com\ resetved hergonthe At. Paul wae ad- maliiead alstyiet 7 fe | eee « to proceed to Washing-\pressed to Private gel pracr eater’ t aking ott of hostilt- : . tl their plans, The BANK OFFICERS ELE cor Motitreal the | . ates base che tae other, | Roomat the Table. The board of trustees of the Dex- th v , Dr. J. Locanda, J.| AV a reevnt jet given at ter H y held Jaina and M. Marti, already | Rochater, NM, ¥..two of the expect- a mee and are. ; cd gets were unable to be prerent. elected land, Concerning theéwar, M. Barreda |The ONer of dealing Happened to be president; R. H, De 1 i do not (Me the Philippine "eh tht atpartiouiarty jovial and dent, and M. W. Pet Mer “ ef Obmit to belng | COMPANAnABle gentleman wat with Mr. 4a succeeds the late A. A 1 by ' ane. * am of opin. | one of (hivacant chara on each side Denny as president. R, H. Denny that they 1 eh to the last | of bim. who was clected vice-prenident " the independence f nich they COUrS? Of t\etern ~ also named one of the trustees to beled # in, for some tihy, In case the expected | succeed’ his father, and M.W ter ; Per eres aoe pe ,* Potector cues arriva, The solitary gentle- son will fill the position formegly ate ¥ , lutionto the man, therefor, could move neither held by F. R. Van Tuy problem to the right nokto the left, but am: - - ably beamed t hawt the repaat H seemingly none Oe werse for hia en- man eon } fter the banquet Coral beads are pretti $2 " r ‘ pias C7 oe dye iy cordbeeey beads are prettie bt hat cw vou enpy yourrelf, old . . 1 asked him to lend me $0, and he! Clap 7 See af soak iiké turquoise {4 It, OW, he lain earnent and no mle:| "Stee paty Oe: Feo ut irregular to resemble coral. i, you didn’t want the gmoney, |emeuth: "T 0 A emia are very becoming to| protted the anxious mother,’ | fellows, wy Of ec answered the foxy "Toa stfings look nice, | rather ated to on sifony | Th - 260. , H has me fixed #o 1] py fof imitation pearl nect ome to the point | mi. March &—Afer nego- Salmost as pretty as the . AKO Post fie 8 whith oxtended over rome ; n What women call “dainty” re-|"V® Yeage oF wy fh, r ore, the Fal. Ft Tay treahm uve nerved the men presony | "AUPORdshagepa) rook Rewmpleted his task |, laueES. th eater lenteseae peed from the hands Chateau nirtmh of Mal wdtwi jaaa t+ and © le to die rich," nepolls Journat, I would rather live can not now be executed. for death ootetripped ft in ite race. The «r- Urad- | der issued by Gen. Merriam in San says Mr fort Knights hae been arrested on & pPraneteco directs Capt. Alibright, ot. Company C, Kansas vol- unteers, t¢ discharge from the ser- [vice of the United States Private | pe adie to compel hin opponents to Mise Small wae shot and Instant-| peymond B. Dewes, When Presi- | surrender walking 0” th gent McKinley published the second rather than accept terme of pattie [call for vorunteers Dawes, who wa! the son of FB, Daweg, of Leaven- very Jealous of the girl, who had re-| worth: Ian, one of the state's most. ong intelligent ormanixation refused, being under age, But later he obtained bie father's consent and was enrotied. The father stood by with tears in Din eyew while the boy wae taking the oath of allegiance, then asked the e oMicer, an ® special favor, permission to take his son home to @inmer, saying it might be the Inst he would ev- er eat ufider the old root. Young Dawee on! ito the wer~ with the apirit of veteran and developed inte @ firat-class sol- dier, but while eh route with his regiment to Manila he wae etriken | with typhold fever and left at Hono. | nearing a lengthy Hin father, learning of the ined the war de- harce that he jute land's Uiness, ino partment for a might be brought-home. Strange to) any, on the very day the disoarge war granted, the soldier died. He was buried in military ceme- tery at Honolulu, and when the der of discharge reached that city it wow forwarded to Manila. Dawer’ father waa a candidate for the le time the solders left Leavenworth, and among the last acts of the oy's lifewas soliciting votes of hie com- f th | the Vandantey family into thean of {i the News! ANd becomen a part tentrat a Late SOME all the mines owne , Ord it ie said ler ed more about Kipling than ft ever hoped to know, and weak greatly pleased in consequence. Kipling had taken much pleasure wu to time in knowing that bie neighbors were just devouring (hemaelvoe with curtosity Unat they had no means of aretifying, When he found that he had to tell ao much about himself he was the moat disgusted man in the state Vermont. The one thing he wanted was to get away from the place and forget all about his first and only experience In an American ly hopeless siteation to yield with lout coming to blows. “If a general, Wyndham, “ean force a pitched battle at 4 distance of cient miles, it leads to more maneuvering land war becomes more scientific ‘than formerly, «nd a general will hout a shot being fred net | which even a funatic would one \take. War tends. in fact, to bee | more and more ® matter of capital Money wiil tease one ot tt, omfac: ere | SE eee oe Ee, othe cent, |Pelied his attentions. Knights 9 44 Gistinguianed. Qtienpere, sought 0 |and skili—that la the whole story.” (law court. Immeliately after Oe ne Yours of oge. Miss Mail was 22/ eniet. At Geet the foune man wa ee case was concluded and Beatty years old | Balestier was bound over to keep the peace the Kiplings began t o make preparations for their foreten trip. Kipling was married on January 18th. 189%, to Mise Carolyn Tal wf this city, The wedding took p in All Souls church, Portiand Pt London. It was said to be the fv filment of a wish expressed by W« t Balestier just before his ¢ ain r [BOTH ARE INSOLVENT |Cole & Price Receivership Is Made Permanent. A receiver will continue to manag | the partnership affairs of Flavius 7 Cole and BE. W. Price, not so much lfor the benefit of either of the liti-|Shortly after their marriag lgating partners as for the benefit and Mrs. Kipling came to this coun of thelr creditors, This was In sub try. They visit Mre. Kipling’s family at Brattleboro, and se stance the ruling Judge Moore of the | Rupertor Court made yesterday after argument upon | Price’s motion to vacate the ap | pointment of 8. L. Crawford as tem- | porary receiver, and to dissovie the restraining enjoining Price charmed was Kipling with the coun- try that he bought @ piece of prop erty in the little hamlet of Duromer ston, a short distance from Brattle boro, and (here bullt a ©, which, with furnishings, cont $50,000, Th *s a long, low building, 9x26, r hour | trom interfering with the partuer ship books and accounts, pending ng roof that has just | the termination of the action. of a thatch, A wide —-- anda extends along one entire en of the hour A long hall divides ttaty jew Church Party the house in the middle ,there being | ROME, March 2—The attention se rooma on either eide of th recently called to nmbnfrtmhtwawd | Pn e? ea ewan designed te |reoently drawn to what Ip called the ee nt an Indian bugalow. It ts ‘Americanism in the Roman Catholic ee ee aside overlooking th lchurch of the United Btates of the COU Uti: river, and the only en- United States is producing its ef HE WILL LIVE this | ~.» “She Was Bret ih Oid Kentucky Late. Popular Song In a Jarge wathert an entertainment it twee that while all col bow are worn In hea be a very large pregpnderance binck hate. Black t# ste omprom- leing; it ts good fof gorning weer and ite wearer in satipged if the af ternoon and perhagw the evening finds her in the same Mack hat Irish linen is unoquestionably good end the sales of fi eots, sasin tablecloths, fancy rd covers and werviettes, quilt ind old-time linen comfortables now being held in Various 00d shops attréet more wo men buyers than the dimit muslin and suramer drs goods dir plays. Gold Magree and coral in old-tim ™ AT RAMAKER MUSIC CO. Pike and iftr Get our Catalo delicatdé Nieto w @ttings, m to have come inta fast e time, A very am@t n lunching at one pf decorated new hotels the oth was gowned tn coral lor and wore @ big black hal and a ¢ of black cloth braided with satin and buttonedwith steel yoke and vest of her cawn were white moire, which wag a contrast to the chain of pink @ral which she wore around her n@ek. and to the end of which hung @ exquisite cross of golden filleree pike SE The commission to fodify the criminal and penal laws @ the Unit- ed States has reported @ Attorney General Griggs the codification the laws applying t@ offences against the p tal service and that private postoffices in newspaper of ficen are forbidden. “This,” says the report, Mis in con- formity with the general ¢ the government, and it is further re commended by connid fons of great weight. It ts found Prat in th ger cities these Instit#tions are made the instrumentality of prac- tices partaking of fraud agd immor- ality, In @ recent Instange at New York they were employ@ as the means by which two hugan lives were sacrificed under circtmstances of grave criminality.” f This refers to the Cornt Adams poisoning case. n muc © day 4 cloth at wom THE PUGET Capit bury Jacob Fa xc. JAMES BOTH'WVE 2% bowton block sarnes- POPULAR SONGS Of the Day —— week from JONATHAN THE COLDNIST to Are sent to us every the leading publishi We have constantly large stock and we an y pleased to try the new pieces over jor you. We Give a Discount to Everyone = WINTER & HARPER Burke Butiding Seattic, Wash. (Various movements are of foot Amricanize Cuba and the Pxbippines Da‘ly Mail. The Spaniards went to @lce ‘Three hundred years a And only jart hav kered, Yes, I rather think that's fo. But, stranger, wait until we Ot Them smart and up to date 4 will see m show thal licks The world, 1 caloulate itil itt aie i quees, The matadore? Why, yes, wll move Them to Chicago. when 1 bet my bottom cent they'll prove Al as sinughtermen ‘ Pork pays a well as any #how: They'll work ay ike mig. And make their tittle piles, abd so Strike of ae well as pig BONNEY & STEWART Successors to 0. C. Shore Undertakers and Funeral & to, - rectors ett i lial ‘The done we'll fix with barrawe—some With lees, some with eweeta, And won't they just make matters hum At corners of the street If with thelr tles and their curls, Their come = and rank ’ ‘They don’t do bustnene with the grin, 1 guess I'm not a Yank Duennast Well, some girls go rides, And, « cmopanion lke We’) iftx them up ae lady guides With bloomers and a bike Just let us Yankees run the #how A twelvemonth, and you bet We'll tench the Bpan‘ards how to go And lick creation yet London Bunch The « Seattle Stay ms AN — * ‘ WERE STARVING Spanish Soldiers Beg B of Enemies. It was in the gathering room of Company 1, at the Tlet Regiment Ar- mory, that I found Lieutenant Wil- Hams one morning, in a group of his mrades, some of whom were busy with accour While others list@ed to comic songs Jingled at the piano. One of the odd things he told me was about giving food to Spanien sold during the days of truce r folte the capture of San Ju nut You see, those chaps were starving,” he sald, “and they'd gneak acrons the seven bund yards be- tween our lines and make motions thal they wanted something to eat Containing all of the One day we got an interpreter and asked them if they didn’t think they had a pretty good rr to strike us for hardtack and things while th or fighting was still or y made lot of polite geri talked =p THe string of Spanish, the aning which was; ‘Honor Jemen and brave soldiers of America, it | true we have been fighting against IN A you; we have tried to kill youy you irfed to kill us, These things ened, and may hagpen Ns again, but In the meantime we Must C rte. eat. Please understand that, ¢ iS , though we shoot you down, we fa a no personal animosity against y whatsoever, We obey orders Just ax you do, and we see no reason Why 1 ane ~d and hardtack if you will be gradu to us ily aux enough to give esp trance 1 in the rear, At every ap-| we need it sorely.’ a | fects in Italy proach to. the house is found the Woll,” said the Heutenant, “that F a Father Semeria, a notable and elo- |i oN trespassing on these speech made a big hit with us, and or m, quent preacher. has recently declar- the 3 ish soldiers went away With ed himself publicly in favor of the |" iing's room is in the southeast an armful of provisions which wr doctrines of Father Hecker, whied opnep m the windows of which |took up In a collection fer them are rewarded as extremoly radical BY |. view of the river may be had for As they started to leave they saluted () § 00a the Vatican. has been | ites up and down, The room was us again the greatest pollt followed by a number of prominent | ciiniy ¢urniahed when the author | ness, and repeated thelr aseurane priests, whose exposition of the rela~ jio.4 there, Only two books could that they thought the war a deplore As well as the tion of church tnd state is creating 1. goon om dictionary and a book of ble business, and that it w ‘ a great senation. This agitation ssnonyme, i thie room were writ- | them great regret in the nanhia has led to the organization of ® new ron most of the chapters of his have to kill such distinguished ger f Oya Wine and strong party called the Semer ptain Courageous.’ tlemen as we had proved our > Luu fania, This party openly advocates | Wi. Kipling is one of the six heirs Cleveland Moffett in Lestic's Week be ae pia 4 yet Ak ven sy * to a large oatate left by her grand. | ly 7 | principlen to s 2 bs = father the late Judee Peahine — view of the continued straggte ne © 7 r ; | petwoon’the state and the Vatican Sule than, HONS i enerk= | ae Benest Meenshiner. ; W O this new movement, it is believed. sorted that Smith had a profounder | 0 eretectier wae to be a joey cages 6 serious ruptar knowledge of international law than Pevenue ollicer Mt math, as ‘ eas erie any other Hving man, When § who nastated In the confiscation of The car turned sharply arowed | ard was on hia telp around the w meny an fillet still, has numerous fourve, and the tall man wh ha@ae-ehtiel Ap Kaaniende of entertaining experiences to relate. lholding on to a strap sor an to vedemwnend. Gome ene to d @tmong them is thi one : hroonely, was suddenty tBrowe from eommerctel treaties between Japag There was one moonshinér that his upright postion with a force /and the great nations of the world, | Jefed all efforts to put him out of that landed him in the lap of a dir Seward was not long in anawerir Pusiness We knew that he was nified dowager pitting nea, him “T know ot Juat one man who can | ‘stilling the ‘dew’ right along and | while his high silk Bat fies trom do the work in ® Manner that whl he ins meat ws scsvew 1 uae he inis head and ro down the aisle atand every possible test,” aaid the , on Wee oO secure COWP je agin” whe aaid, ax he rose to his | Smithy determined od Scotchman, head and |feet again with profuse epologies: ‘The mikado sent for Judge Smith, oulders above the average moun “| am compelled to say that in my offering him a muntfcent salary gttineer In intelligence } lacking in that The judge remained six years In the waiche flowery kingdom, and completed the comme jal negotiations between that country and the United States an well ag with éther nations, When Judge Smith returned hore tt was with « fottune’and presents that re- judament you were complete grasp of the strap wan esnential to the highest eMfcien- ey in maintaining an upright attl- ‘That wan all, but it crushed him urve. tude when turning @ © The Prince of Wales has intro- quired fifty. trunks to transport duced an innovation In the way of ‘This fortune was left to hiv daugh nookties. It Is red and covered with (er, Mrs. Balestier, who holds it in small white maltese crosses, @ [trust for her sx children, | cows, of which he is ve Aubrey Reardsley's original draw. + ings have made their agpearance at London auctions, The Tast lot since the artist's death sold for $36.50 and 0 aplece W. 8 Gilbert things besides the He ts an takes gr muse amateur agric delight: tn

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